Whew! Originally, I wasn't intending to do this age swap so soon... But I got inspired, so here it is!

Background's lazy and now that I double-check, some of the perspectives are plain wrong, but...I'm still reasonably happy with it, so I'm done with it for now.

So...in case the comic isn't clear: they're in some sort of museum. Wonder Woman's hunting down Baby-Doll, who stole some magical artifact. As apparent, Wonder Woman's getting sick of chasing after Baby-Doll...just when she pops out with the artifact which, surprise surprise, grants the wielder the ability to drain age (and apparently convenient age-appropriate clothing modification).

So yeah...Wonder Tot had better find some way to grab that amulet from Mary Dahl (bit weird to be calling her Baby-Doll at this point lol) if she wants to turn back to normal.

I kinda deviated from the norm with both Wonder Tot and Mary Dahl's design, just for kicks.

Um Mary, maybe you should have performed an age swap with one of the prisoners at Arkam Asylum. Granted you aren't technically breaking any laws, but the Justice League may still try do reverse this anyway because they don't want Wonder Woman out of commission. Since you don't have any superpowers of your own, well god help you.

Magic was involved when Wonder Woman was made out of mud too. It's still trying to steal the age out of someone who's been an adult since the 1940s and putting it into someone who was working in a 70s sitcom at the age of 21. If the spell was designed to transfer her condition, THEN it would make sense...but it was an age absorbing spell.

No, biologically she's in her forties. Physically, she APPEARS to be about four years old. If she were biologically four, she'd be immortal. That's not that nature of her condition.

In her episode, when she starts talking about how she tried out for other acting gigs, she shows a bit of age on her face, wrinkles under the eyes, that sort of thing. She's wearing make-up, as shown when she started crying.

That's actually what bothers me. They say she has 'systemic hypoplasia', which is a bit vague since the term systemic has to refer to something... There's several types of hypoplasia though - the closest I could find being cartilage-hair hypoplasia which causes dwarfism among other things.

Actually, I just looked into it and apparently what she has isn't dwarfism, but systemic hypoplasia. So rather than just a lack of growth hormones, her body just completely stopped aging at a certain point.

Sooo, I could argue that the amulet drained the age from Wonder Woman and basically forced Baby-Doll's body to age (which was biologically about 5 or 6). Yeah, let's go with that!